Monday, December 8, 2025

Tim zerknittert alte Post / Tim Collapsing Old Mail

Being where I live, I don’t meet a lot of mail-artists. I’ve met a few in such places like Thomasville North Carolina (Richard C.) and the Temple of Apollo in Greece (Katerina N.). Things seem to happen socially in the mail-art world, but they always happen over there. The kids like to gather in NYC or Chicago, places that are hard for me to get to. I’ll get to one of these meetups at some time, but I haven’t yet. I text pretty frequently with a couple mail-artists, which feels slightly more personal than sending weird things to them, but not by much. In some ways, I feel like I send from a far-off planet, an outpost. Not exactly a land connected to a larger artistic community.

One meet-up randomly happened at a Stereolab show at the legendary Cat’s Cradle in Chapel Hill North Carolina. I was a little sick that day, hanging out at Weaver Street Café listening to Lætitia Sadier talk on the phone. She was a few tables over from me and talking loudly. It sounded like the tour wasn’t going well. Thankfully she was speaking in English. After finishing my coffee, I went down Franklin Street to the club. I made it through the opener and then most of Stereolab before I decided to move towards the back. I felt like I might need to leave quickly.

While I made my way through the crowd, someone stopped me. I had no idea who they were, but they knew my name. At first, I thought this was my assassin sent to kill me. Maybe from the future, maybe from our time. After a few quick words, I learned it was Tim Collapse…from mail. He recognized me because of all the silly stuff I send with my face on it. If he had done the same, I might not have worried about a potentially assassination attempt. Although I was happy to meet him, it wasn’t the place to have a proper hang. Nothing worse than yelling in a loud club followed by screaming, “What!” over and over. It was a quick meeting and then I made my way to the back of the club. Over the next couple of years, I continued to send mail to Tim, even picking up his phone number along the way.

Out of the blue he sent me a card asking if I wanted some of his mail. Yes! A little while later he followed up with some texts. “It {the collection} does contain a few Richard Canard pieces.” / “It’s around 4-5 medium sized priority boxes.” / Do you ever get to Reconsidered Goods in Greensboro? That might be a good meet-up spot, so you haven’t got to drive so far.” Reconsidered Goods it was. We organized a date to meet, and I drove directly there from class. 

Tim. 
 

Tim and I talked a little bit before loading the six or seven boxes into the back of my car. Although he mentioned that it was a lot of mail, I began thinking about what I had stacked at home. When he said this, a slight tinge of anxiety ran through me. I have more stuff, more paper, and more weirdo garbage than I would ever be able to work with, and now I’m taking on more.

Tim talked about his kids and showed me pictures of his daughter’s drawings. We went over stuff about music (Einstürzende Neubauten being one, thus the title of this piece) and a few mail-artists that we’ve both sent to for years, one of which has been a problem in the network for decades. He told me about his job and the weird and surprising sprawl of Mebane North Carolina. Of everything he said to me, he said, “I only keep the materials I’m working on…except for glue and what not. I’ll buy stuff, make something, and give the remaining materials away.” It was the most impressive thing I’d ever heard before. How is that possible? How can you not hoard tons of 19th century paper?




 

The two of us wandered around the creative reuse store looking for materials. I found the usual paper for broadsides and some mailing supplies, while he focused on the ephemera section. While I was digging through things alongside him, I had a strange flashback when the UNCW radio station liquified all of their records, CD’s, and tapes. There, digging day after day until they tossed what was left, I’d dig through box after box with another weirdo. Since then, the accumulation of records and of paper have almost exclusively been a solitary one. Never dug through boxes of someone’s school photos (lots of pictures of Matt) or discarded bits of paper before with someone else. Unfortunately, I was on the clock. I had to get back to my house at my usual time, or the mess would have accumulated. I bid farewell to Tim and went back towards Winston-Salem.

When Miles was firmly engaged with his episodes, I started to bring in the boxes, first looking through them before taking them upstairs. The quick look was impressive, lots of zines and lots of meticulously organized pieces of paper. All of the Mike Dyar works were in one large envelope. All of the Ryosuke Cohen braincells were beside one another. I was impressed by the organization. Someone with such organizational skills could be disciplined enough to only keep the materials they were going to use. Once everything was upstairs awaiting further thumbing through, that feeling of anxiety started back up. What am I going to do with all of this new stuff?

Since writing the above, a couple days have passed. I finished up the last thing for this year. The desk is clean. The desk was clean. It took a few hours to sort through everything that Tim gave me. I made piles that I was going to donate, piles that I was going to keep, and piles that I was going to cut up. The latter part is going to take forever. I’ve already started. An hour of cutting barely collapsed the pile. To start, I’m going to make my usual brand of collages and then move out collaboratively. Might just send big piles of what I cut up for others to reassemble and then send around.

Thanks, Tim, for your generosity.

Friday, November 21, 2025

The Story of Trash Bin Zine Rescued from the trash bin, bin

Rescued From the Murky Garbage Depths
 

I’m constantly searching for paper. Each week I move from place to place looking for any little nugget, especially free nuggets. The treasure trove of paper is the free bin at a local bookstore. I’ve written about this place over and over, too much. Outside of the free paper, I like interacting with the weridos. You have the old ladies looking for Jesus oriented books, the resellers collecting ancient textbooks they’ll never sell, the two-second lookers, and the wingnuts. Some people sit there all day looking for copies of Lee Iacocca’s autobiography that they stick into a piece of tattered luggage.

From afar, I’m definitely in the wingnut category. If you’re watching, I’m the guy hoping to find hand written notes, molded pieces of paper, antiquated medical images, and Russian children’s books. Clearly, the wingnut category. A few folks have even asked what I was doing. One even asked if I had permission to rip out the empty pages in the front of books. “No,” I said.

All of this gets recycled into a new thing. I take the books home and then cut them up. The weirdest images get scanned and then folded into broadsides or zines months, or years later. Like most collage artists, I have thousands of these sorts of images laying around my upstairs room. The blank pages are used for empty space in collages, I use a lot of these in various states of decay. You would be amazed by the differences between one white sheet of paper from 1896 and one from 1946. When it gets golden spots, it gets beautiful, when it yellows…magnifique. This sort of thing you can’t really buy. Time is the creator.

While digging this week, I found a familiar cover. No, it wasn’t Palin’s autobiography that people give away in droves, but something I made. This has never happened before. What I found was a zine I made earlier in the year. Most of the copies I made were mailed off to people across the United States, maybe 50. Another 50 I dropped in random little libraries around the area, namely the creative reuse shop near my house. Those folks might get what I’m doing. The zine had done some moving around before it got to the free bin. Someone had to pick up a copy, have it with them for a little while, and then put it in the free bin. It traveled! This is about the greatest compliment I could get for my work. I expect most of what I make ends up in piles or in the trash, but this one had to be dealt with. Someone had to pick it up and look at it…it had a function. It lived.

Ironically, the zine was a collection of found images. Most of the images in the zine were found in the exact free bins where I rescued this copy. So much searching was reduced to a handful of scanned images, made into a small zine I printed at work, and then brought home.

Friday, October 10, 2025

MEG Zine: The Not Not Jazz Philosophy

 Hello!

If you’re holding this, you’re definitely interested in the not-not jazz band, Meg. They’re a beautiful group of three guys named Matt, Eddie, and Grant. If you haven’t noticed, their initials spell out the groups name. Clever, right? The name is in honor of the great 2018 Jason Statham vehicle, The Meg. All members of the band thoroughly enjoy the movie as well as the roll sharks have in the lives of humans. Jaws is another shark movie. 

 

Now that we have met the band and have learned a little history about vicious sea creatures, I feel like I need to tell a little bit about me, the author. My name is Jon Foster. At my behest, Meg came together when I ordered them to. I forced Eddie to contact Matt to make a band. I have no idea what Grant was doing or how they found him. Some say he wonders the streets looking for keyboard jobs, others think he’s Rick Wakeman reincarnated without the cape.

The reason I wanted them to come together was because Winston-Salem needs a not-not jazz band. For years Winston (as the locals call it) has been inundated with cover bands, bland indie rock, and a smattering of hardcore and metal groups. If you look at the town’s musical history, most Winston bands can be traced back to Chris Stamey’s graduating class at Reynolds High School. Who else do we have, Ben Folds…George Hamilton? He’s not even that George Hamilton, the lizard-skinned guy from Zorro, The Gay Blade. No, our George Hamilton is the singer of the 1963 country hit, “Abilene.” 

 

In essence, it was my vision to bring a not-not jazz band to Winston, much like that person who decided to bring all of those mattress stores and $20.00 burger restaurants to Winston. Me, the mattress people, the burger boys…all had a vision. More than anything, I needed something good to go and see the once a month I’m allowed out of the house. Of course that’s only on weekends, no way can I get out during a weekday.

Soon after I put them together, they started practicing. I think of myself as the modern day Don Kirshner, Malcolm McLaren, or Lou Pearlman. Wait, not the last guy…I’m hoping to get some money out of this arrangement, the fair way. There’s money in not-not jazz, right?

 

The gestation of the band didn’t happen overnight. The time from when they started practicing until their first show on October 17th, 2025 was about a year. During that time, I made sure that the band rehearsed every Wednesday and if they didn’t, they were fined forty dollars. For musicians, especially not-not jazz musicians, this sum is incredibly high. “Normal” musicians could easily incur this debt. At the end of every practice, I made sure to give them insight into their songs. I had to be sure that my Saturday out, six months from that time, was going to be worth. Strong IPAs are expensive. Ubers are expensive.

At first the band was somewhat reluctant to take my advice. Although they knew me as someone with painfully good taste in music, film, and books, I didn’t have the musical vocabulary. Not knowing musical terms or even how to play basic guitar, limited me…at first. I’d mouth something to Grant and he’d try it. Obviously, Matt was the most difficult. I had to push him to work a little harder. No one needed simple drum parts. If you can’t play in weird time signatures by the time you’re forty, you’re going to be stuck copying Abe Cunningham for the rest of your life. Eventually he learned my musical language and the songs improved. Eddie was somewhat more receptive to my immediate musical direction. He has multiple Sonny Sharrock t-shirts, so he gets it. Ask him about meeting Nels Cline that time, I’m sure he’ll tell you about it. 

 

After about six months of practices, they had two or three songs they could work with. Since this is not-not jazz, three is more than enough considering there’s no real plan for ending a song in the not-not jazz philosophy. Write a good part, vamp on that part for three or for minutes, come back to the opening melody / riff etc., and then you’re done. Doing things in this way, allows showgoers to get all of the information they need in the first three minutes of the song so they can go to the bathroom in the last eight minutes of the song. It’s a considerate approach. Also, if a song is quite long, people think it’s more complex than it really is. Mozart had those long symphonies so people just assumed they were good, that’s why middle school symphonies play them to this day. 

 

Not only am I the executive producer (my given title) but I’m also the art director. For this band, image is everything. Although the band was playing with big scary shark imagery, the brand identity was considered for everything. T-shirt designs, the most important part of any band’s identity (it’s annoying to play the music out loud on the street, but you can wear the shirt, get it?) was painfully scrutinized. Shark images were ruled out based on their level of ferociousness. No way could I put a nurse shark on the cover of a shirt since they pose no threat to humans. Only great whites, tiger sharks, and bull sharks could be depicted. These animals tend to bite humans (at least Australians in great numbers) in two. Shirt designs have to mirror the music. The music is based in sexual violent so a cotton poly blend t-shirt should mirror that.

The future is bright for Meg, as long as their willing to heed my advice. In the coming months, I will expect the songs to get more complicated as they push themselves at my behest. In not-not jazz circles, the top is attainable. Get a show or a couple shows with Tortoise and you’ve reached the top of the not-not jazz mountain. It’s a rarely visited mountain, most people don’t find it a pleasant stay. It’s not a tall mountain. You might call it a “butte.” Honestly, who wants to climb the Mount Everest of music with all of those frozen bodies littering the trail? 

https://www.instagram.com/megisaband/